Urmila Mahadev
Urmila Mahadev is an American mathematician and theoretical computer scientist known for her work in quantum computing and quantum cryptography.
Education and career
Mahadev is originally from Los Angeles, where her parents are physicians. She became interested in quantum computing through a course with Leonard Adleman at the University of Southern California,[1] where she graduated in 2010.[2]
She went to the University of California, Berkeley for graduate study, supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.[2] As a student of Umesh Vazirani at Berkeley, Mahadev discovered interactive proof systems that could demonstrate with high certainty, to an observer using only classical computation, that a quantum computer has correctly performed a desired quantum-computing task.[1]
She completed her Ph.D. in 2018,[3] and after continued postdoctoral research at Berkeley,[1] she became an assistant professor of computing and mathematical sciences at the California Institute of Technology.[4]
Recognition
For her work on quantum verification, Mahadev won the Machtey Award at the Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science in 2018, and in 2021 one of the three inaugural Maryam Mirzakhani New Frontiers Prizes for early-career achievements by women mathematicians.[5][6]
References
- Klarreich, Erica (October 8, 2018), "Graduate Student Solves Quantum Verification Problem: Urmila Mahadev spent eight years in graduate school solving one of the most basic questions in quantum computation: How do you know whether a quantum computer has done anything quantum at all?", Quanta
- Wall of Scholars, University of Southern California, retrieved 2020-09-19
- Urmila Mahadev at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Urmila Mahadev, California Institute of Technology, retrieved 2020-09-19
- "Prizes", FOCS 2018, retrieved 2020-09-19
- "Winners of the 2021 Breakthrough Prizes in life sciences, fundamental physics and mathematics announced", Breakthrough Prizes, September 10, 2020, retrieved 2020-09-19